CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] The instant application is a continuation-in-part of copending U. S. Patent application
Serial No. 709,891, entitled "Power Rate System and Method for Actuating Vehicle Safety
Device," filed by applicant on June 4, 1991, and assigned to the assignee of the instant
invention.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] The instant invention relates to systems and methods for triggering the deployment
or actuation of vehicular safety devices and, more particularly, to a prediction-based
system and method which anticipates conditions requiring such deployment or actuation
of the safety devices to provide superior response thereto.
[0003] A variety of systems for actuating vehicular safety devices are well known in the
art. Such systems are used to sense a crash condition and, in response to such a condition,
to actuate an air bag, or lock a seat belt, or actuate a pretensioner for a seat belt
retractor. Typically, the safety device is actuated or deployed into its protective
position when an impact exceeding a predetermined magnitude is detected by the actuating
system.
[0004] One prior art method for crash detection integrates the output of an electronic acceleration
sensor over time and compares the result against a time-varying threshold velocity.
A major drawback of this method is its need for determining when to start running
the time-varying threshold, i.e., when the reference time for the time-varying threshold
is to be reset to zero time. Another problem associated with the integration method
of crash detection is that crash severity cannot be determined early enough for high-speed
angular, partial barrier, or pole crashes. Moreover, the wide "grey area" between
"fire" and "no-fire" conditions for low-speed crash conditions often results in an
inadvertent deployement of the safety device when deployment is unnecessary, or nondeployment
of the safety device when deployment is necessary.
[0005] Still further, raw velocity is not a particularty good measure of the effect of a
crash on the human body. One criterion often emloyed with the integration method is
the "5 inch-30 msec" rule, which states that an air bag should fire 30 msec prior
to the time in which the passenger to be protected thereby will have moved 5 inches.
Unfortunately, the passenger may well move forward 5 inches during a normal vehicle
braking pattern-a condition in which air bag deployment would not only be undesirable
but extremely hazardous.
[0006] Other prior art methods for assessing crash severity attempt to deemphasize the use
of simple velocity calculations and instead calculate values for vehicle "jerk," i.e.,
the slope of the acceleration data; or the energy dissipated during a crash. Unfortunately,
experience has shown that jerk alone is incapable of properly discriminating between
conditions requiring actuation of a vehicle safety device and conditions where such
actuation is either unnecessary or undesirable. Moreover, the "energy method" continued
to utilize velocity information, resulting in the same types of deployment problems
and slow response times as are encountered with the integration method. Additionally,
the energy method is further limited in that it is accurate only over short time intervals.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0007] It is an objet of the instant invention to provide a prediction-based system and
method for crash detection which can reliably and instantaneously detect crash severity
earlier than an integration, jerk, or energy algorithm, and over a wider variety of
circumstances and a wider time interval than is currently possible.
[0008] Another object of the instant invention is to provide a system and method for crash
detection that is event-based rather than timer-based.
[0009] The instant system for actuating a vehicle safety device in the event of a vehicle
crash or sudden vehicle deceleration comprises means for generating sampled data representative
of the instantaneous acceleration of the vehicle; a RAM for storing consecutive values
of the acceleration data; means for providing an acceleration correction value corresponding
to a value of instantaneous vehicle acceleration to which the vehicle passenger can
himself resist; means for subtracting the correction value from the consecutive values
for the acceleration data to obtain corrected acceleration data; means for integrating
(summing) the corrected acceleration data to determine a modified vehicle velocity
value; means for determining a transitory jerk value based on a predetermined number
of consecutive values for the acceleration data stored in the RAM; means for multiplying
the modified vehicle velocity value and the transitory jerk value to obtain a velocity-jerk
product; and means responsive to the velocity-jerk product for actuating the vehicle
safety device when the velocity-jerk product exceeds a threshold value therefor.
[0010] Under the instant method, a correction value
a* is subtracted from the raw acceleration data obtained by sampling the output of a
suitable vehicle acceleration sensor to obtain corrected acceleration data. The correction
value
a* represents an acceleration that a passenger with a seat belt can be expected to overcome
and may be either a constant or a function of time, jerk, or other suitable parameter.
A damped or "modified" velocity term
v* is then calculated by integrating (summing) the corrected acceleration data. The
modified velocity is thereafter multiplied with the transitory jerk and compared with
at least one threshold to determine whether the air bag should be deployed. Thus,
it may be said that the instant invention employs damping to reduce the effects of
acceleration in the calculation of a velocity term which is thereafter multplied by
the transitory jerk and compared with at least one threshold.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0011]
FIGS. 1A and 1B illustrate a typical vehicle crash acceleration input signal and typical
rough road acceleration input signals, respectively;
FIGS. 2A and 2B illustrate raw vehicle velocity based on the acceleration waveforms
of FIGS. 1A and 1B, respectively;
FIGS. 3A and 3B illustrate modified vehicle velocity signals based on the acceleration
waveforms of FIGS. 1A and 1B, respectively, as calculated in accordance with the instant
method;
FIG. 4 is a plot of vehicle acceleration a(t) versus the time-to-fire of an air bag whose deployment is to be triggered by the
instant system and method;
FIG. 5 is a plot of a two-dimensional signal space representing the air bag's firing
threshold;
FIG.6 is an illustration of a general shematic of an exemplary crash discriminator
constructed in accordance with the instant invention; and
FIG. 7 contains the "drop-out" condition for the system shown in FIG. 6.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT OF THE INVENTION
[0012] Under the instant invention, a modified velocity term is calculated by subtracting
a correction value from each acceleration value before integrating. The correction
value represents an acceleration that a passenger with a seat belt can be expected
to himself resist, and may be either a constant or perhaps a function of the transitory
slope and/or the product of the transitory slope and the modified velocity, as those
terms will be more fully defined hereinbelow.
[0013] For example, if the correction value is a constant equal to 2 Gs, then the passenger
can be expected to resist a 2 G force upon him without requiring deployment of the
air bag. Accordingly, upon experiencing a constant acceleration of 2 Gs, the passenger
will resist or otherwise adjust to the resultant force upon him. Such is the case
in the typical braking scenario, where a constant deceleration force of perhaps 0.5
Gs is applied to vehicle passengers, with the passenger experiencing a slight initial
forward movement, after which the passenger adjusts to the braking force to halt such
forward movement. This may explain why the automotive industry generally requires
that an air bag not fire upon detecting a low MPH crash, such as an 8 MPH crash. Stated
another way, a vehicle passenger wearing a seat can typically resist an average vehicle
accelaration of about Gs for 100 msec, with the instantaneous acceleration peaking
as high as perphas 15 Gs.
[0014] Under the instant invention, a value for modified velocity
v* is calculated as follows:

where:
- a(t) =
- acceleration at time t, and
- a*(t) =
- correction factor equal to acceleration to which a human passenger can be expected
to resist or otherwise adjust, at time t
The acceleration correction factor
a*(t) employed by the instant system and method may vary with time
t or may otherwise be a constant. It will be noted, however, that where the acceleration
sensor is "one-sided", i.e., generates only positive G values while clipping negative
accelaration inputs at zero, much of the raw data from rough road scenarios (characterized
by positive and negative swings) is lost. Accordingly, under the instant invention,
the jerk
m, i.e., the slope of the acceleration data, is used to predict negative G values to
be incorporated into the modified velocity term
v*, as follows:

where
â and
b are constants which are preferably chosen to compensate for variation in vehicle
structure and the location of the acceleration sensor within the vehicle. For example,
a sensor located in the crush zone will predict higher G values hitting the passenger(s)
than will actually occur due to damping, which is a function of the structure of the
vehicle. For simplicity,
v* is assigned a value of zero if
v*<
o.
[0015] A rank-order filter is thereafter used to provide the median value of a set of acceleration
values. The rank-order/median filter removes any wild variance data, such as high-frequency
noise, EMI, or spiky crash data, while retaining siginficant "edge data," i.e., data
relating to a slant-up or a step function.
[0016] The goal of a prediction-based crash discriminator is to accurately predict when
a severe crash is going to occur from present-received data. This contracts with known
methods of crash detection which instead rely on a certain change is some physical
quantity while varying a corresponding threshold value therefor with time to converge
to a solution.
[0017] Accordingly, the instant invention seeks to predict where the acceleration is going
and verify that the prediction is on target. If the crash waveform is modeled as a
slant-up function havig a slope equal to the transitory jerk
m, the instantaneous vehicle acceleration
a(t) is:

thus, at a future time
t*, the corresponding vehicle acceleration
a(t*) is calculated as follows:

Stated in another manner, a future value for acceleration at time
t* may be calculated using the transitory jerk
m. Since the air bag is preferably deployed while the acceleration data is still increasing,
i.e., of this positive slant-up, it is immaterial that the above aquation
a(t*) is not perfect for all the, e.g., after the acceleration data has peaked and begins
to nominally decrease. Indeed, experience has indicated that estimating the transitory
jerk
m over a short time is adequate for practicing the instant method, notwithstanding
exclusion from the model for a(t*) of various data fluctuations which result from
multiplicative and additive noise.
[0018] After predicting a value for acceleration as time
t* using the jerk
m of the acceleration data, the predicted acceleration value
a(t
*) is subsequently checked against the present acceleration value
a(t) when the current time
t equals the prediction time
t*, as follows:

Referring to FIG.4 of the drawings, wherein vehicle acceleration
a(
t) is plotted against the time-to-fire ("TTF") of the air bag whose deployment is to
be triggered by the instant system and method, the value for transitory jerk
m must be at least as great as a predetermined minimum value
x, with the air bag thereafter being triggered when vehicle acceleration
a(
t) exceeds a baseline value
z. For example, in FIG. 4, where
m₁, m₂ and
m₃ are different estimates for the transitory jerk
m, m₁>m₂>x and, hence, the use of
m₁ will cause a trigger signal to be generated at TTF₁, and the use of
m₂ will cause a trigger signal to be generated at TTF₂. Stated another way, the air
bag is triggered when the predicted slope
m has a larger value than
x and the actual acceleration
a(t) exceeds
z.
[0019] Preferably, an additional trigger criterion is employed to ensure deployment of the
air bag during a severe crash which was not otherwise predicted by the above algorithm.
Specifically, the air bag should preferably alternatively fire when
a(t)=w. Hence, in FIG. 4, where
m₃<
x, an estimated transitory jerk
m₃ will still cause a trigger signal to be generated at TTF₃. A trigger signal will
similarly be generated when the lines with slopes
m₁ and
m₂ cross threshold w. FIG. 5 is a two- dimensional signal space representing the firing
thresholds outlined in FIG. 4. It is particularly significant that there is no time-varying
threshold; rather, each axis reflects events rather than a time scale.
[0020] FIGS. 1A and 1B show a typical vehicle crash acceleration signal and a typical accelaration
signal generated by a vehicle encountering rough road, respectively. FIGS. 2A and
2B show the integration of this waveform to produce velocity. It is noted that, for
the first phases of a typical crash, the velocity varies linearly with time. FIGS.
3A and 3B shows the modified vehicle velocity
v* calculated in the manner described hereinabove, with the vehicle velocity
v* for the first phases of a typical crash similarly varying in proposition to time.
As such, the modified velocity
v* can be substituted for time
t, as long as a scale factor can be used. Thus, under the instant invention, an event-based
time measure is used in place of the timer or clock typically found in prior art physically-based
systems. Stated another way, under the instant invention, a real event-the modified
velocity
v* is used in place of a timer or clock, thereby reducing its dependence on start-up
criteria: if the algorithm is started is the absence of any event, the modidied velocity
term
v* remains zero, and the event-based time measure remains effectively zero. The system
and method of the instant invention continue to check for an event. In contrast, start-up
criteria are of critical importance to physically-based crash detection algorithms
which otherwise simply continue unabated in the absence of any event.
[0021] Consider, for example, the rough road accelerator data illustrated in FIG. 1B and
the plot of the resulting modified velocity
v* illustrated in FIG. 3B: if a physically-based crash detection algorithm starts upon
encountering the first "hump" in the waveform, the second "hump" will likely trigger
deployment of the air bag, is such algorithms typically fall to check the data falling
between the two humps. Stated another way, prior art physically-based algorithms are
likely to think that the second hump is a mere continuation of the first hump, indicating
a condition requiring deployment of the air bag. In contrast, with the instant system
and method, the modidied velocity
v* first increases and then decreases to zero to "reset" its event-based algorithm.
When the second hump occurs, the system and method recognizes is for what it is-a
second event of small magnitude. Stated another way, since the modified velocity
v* is proportional to time
t, the modified velocity
v* can be substituted for time
t in the equation for
a(t) to obtain the following:

where
m̂ is an estimate for
m. Note that a scale factor is not required as the acceleration threshold is preferably
adjusted to compensate for its absence.
[0022] FIG. 6 is an illustration of a general schematic 10 of an exemplary crash discriminator
constructed in accordance with the instant invention. An analog output signal 12 from
an acceleration sensor 14 is filtered with an anti-aliasing filter 16 and thereafter
digitally sampled by an analog-to-digital converter 18.
[0023] The resulting digital acceleration data is stored in a FIFO RAM 20 of length
N where it is divided into two equal halves. Both
N/2 pieces are rank-order filtered to provide an estimate of that
N/2 piece unaffected by spiky noise. Specifically, in the rank-order filter 22, a set
of
N samples are rearranged from top to bottom, i.e., in order of decreasing value. The
top or rank value of
N is given to the greatest valued samples. The sample with the least value is assigned
a rank value of one, The rank-order filter 22 then outputs the lone data value corresponding
to the user-designated rank
R.
[0024] And, if
R=
(N+1)/2, the rank-order filter is called a median filter since it generates the median value
as its output. The benefits of the rank-order/median filter is that any wild variance
points are removed from the data. Spiky noise, EMI, and spiky crash data is thus smoothed
before being processed using the instant method. Significantly, "edge data," i.e.,
data relating to a slant-up or a step function, is preserved through use of this filter,
even though such edge data is typically of a high frequency.
[0025] Implementing the above filter:
- A1 =
- rank order filter of newest N/2 data samples
- A2 =
- rank order filter of oldest N/2 data samples
An estimate for the jerk
m is obtained by subtracting
A2 from
A1, as follows:

The rank-order filter output
A2 is also used to calculate the modidied velocity
v* by subtracting a scale factor from
A2 and then accumulating the result. The
m̂ and
v* are then multiplied and the velocity-jerk product
m̂v* is compared to two threshold values: if the velocity-jerk product
m̂v* is greater than a first threshold corresponding to value
z in FIG. 4, then a first flag
a1 is set to logical one. If the velocity-jerk product
m̂v* is greater than a second threshold corresponding to value
w in FIG. 4, then a second flag
a2 is set to logical one. The estimated jerk
m̂ is also compared to a third threshold corresponding to value
x in FIG. 4: if the estimated jerk
m̂ is greater than
x, flag
s is set to logical one. The deployment of the air bag is triggered if (1) flag
a2 is set to logical one; or (2) both flag
s and flag
a1 are set to logical one.
[0026] FIG. 7 contains the "drop-out" conditions for the instant system. Specifically, flag
s is set to logical zero when both a large negative value is calculated for the estimated
jerk
m̂, i.e., the jerk
m̂ is less than a minimum value
mMIN therefor, and the modified velocity
v* is less than some small value,
vMIN since this indicates that the vehicle is experiencing a large negative deceleration,
thereby invalidating the earlier prediction of the jerk
m̂. The values
mMIN and
vMIN are predetermined based on crash sensor location within the vehicle, as well as the
impact-absorptive characteristics of the vehicle in which the instant system is implemented.
Additionally, flag
s is preferably reset to zero if the modified velocity
v* is equal to zero for
k samples in a row, since as the earlier prediction for the jerk
m̂ will likewise have become invalid.
[0027] While the preferred embodiment of the invention has been disclosed, it should be
appreciated that the invention is susceptible of modification without departing from
the spirit of the invention or the scope of the subjoined claims.
1. A method for triggering deployment or actuation of a vehicle safety device, said method
comprising the steps of:
sampling data representative of instantaneous vehicle accelaration;
storing consecutive values of said acceleration data in a buffer;
correcting said consecutive values of said acceleration data by subtracting a correction
value therefrom;
integrating said corrected acceleration data to determine a modified vehicle velocity
value;
calculating a transitory jerk value based on said stored values of said acceleration
data;
multiplying said modified vehicle velocity value and said transitory jerk value
to obtain a modified, transitory velocity-jerk product; and;
comparing said velocity-jerk product with a first threshold value;
triggering deployment or actuation of said safety device when said velocity-jerk
product exceeds said threshold value.
2. The method of claim 1, further including the steps of:
comparing said transitory jerk value with a second threshold value;
comparing said velocity-jerk product with a third threshold value of lesser magnitude
than said first thershold value; and
triggering deployment or actuation of said safety device when said transitory jerk
value and said velocity-jerk product exceed said second and third threshold values,
respectively.
3. A method for determining if an event requires actuation of a vehicle safety device,
said method comprising the steps of :
receiving information representative of instantaneous vehicle acceleration;
determining a first measure which is evaluative of said received instantaneous
vehicle acceleration information in relation to time;
determining a second measure correlated with the progress of said event based on
said received acceleration information;
determining an estimated vehicle acceleration value based on said first measure
and said second measure, wherein said second measure is used as a time value;
comparing said first measure with a first predetermined thershold value;
comparing said estimated acceleration value with a second predetermined threshold
value; and
actuating said vehicle safety device if said first measure has exceeded said first
predetermined thershold value and said estimated acceleration value has exceeded said
second predetermined threshlod value.
4. The method of claim 3 further comprising:
comparing said estimated vehicle acceleration value with a third predetermined
threshold value, wherein said third predetermined threshold value is greater than
said second predetermined threshold value; and
actuating said vehicle safety device is said estimated acceleration value exceeds
said third predetermined threshold value.
5. The method of claim 3 wherein said step of determining said first measure includes
the step of determining a jerk value from the slope of said received acceleration
information in relation to time.
6. The method of claim 5 further comprising the steps of:
determining said second measure by integrating said received acceleration information
to generate a vehicle velocity value; and wherein said estimated acceleration value
is determined by multiplying said jerk value with said vehicle velocity value.
7. The method of claim 3 wherein said step of receiving comprises the steps of:
sampling said acceleration information; and
storing said sampled information in a memory means as digital data.
8. The method of claim 7 further comprising the step of rank-order filtering said stored
digital data, wherein said step of determining said first measure comprises generating
a median rank-order value from said rank-order filtering.
9. The method of claim 3 wherein said first and said second predetermined threshold values
are sequentially exceeded.
10. The method of claim 3 including the step of modifying said received acceleration information
with a modification value.
11. A system for determining if an event requires actuation of a vehicle safety device
comprising:
sampling means for sampling raw information representative of instantaneous vehicle
acceleration;
first determining means responsive to said received acceleration information for
determining a first measure evaluative of said received acceleration information in
relation to time;
second determining means responsive to said received acceleration information for
determining a second measure correlated with the progress of said event;
third determining means responsive to said first measure and said second measure
for determining an estimated vehicle acceleration value, wherein said second measure
is used as a time value;
first comparing means responsive to said first measure for generating a first output
signal if said first measure has exceeded a first predetermined threshold value;
second comparing means responsive to said estimated vehicle acceleration value
for generating a second ouptut signal if said estimated acceleration value has exceeded
a second predetermined threshold value; and
means for actuating said vehicle safety device in response to the generation of
said first and said second output signals.
12. The system of claim 11 wherein said second comparing means generates a third output
signal when said estimated acceleration value exceeds a third predetermined threshold
value, said third predetermined threshold value being greater than said second predetermined
threshold value; and wherein said actuating means actuates said vehicle safety device
in response to the generation of said third output signal.
13. The system of claim 11 wherein said receiving means comprises:
a sampling means for generating N samples of said acceleration information; and
a FIFO storage means for storing said N samples of information.
14. The system of claim 13 wherein said first determining means comprises:
a first rank-order filter for rank-order filtering a newest first set of samples
stored in said storage means;
a second rank-order filter for rank-order filtering an oldest second set of samples
stored in said storage means; and
a first subtracting means connected to said first and said second rank-order filter
for subtracting said second set of samples from said first set of samples to generate
said first measure.
15. The system of claim 14 wherein said third determining means for determining said estimated
acceleration value comprises:
a second subtracting means connected to said second rank-order filter for subtracting
a scale factor from said second set of samples;
an accumulator means for accumulating the output of said second subtracting means;
and
a multiplying means connected to said accumulator means and said first subtracting
means for generating said estimated vehicle acceleration value.
16. A method of predicting vehicle acceleration information for determining if an event
requires actuation of a vehicle safety device, said method comprising the steps of:
sampling raw information representative in instantaneous vehicle acceleration;
damping said sampled acceleration information with a predetermined scale factor;
determining a modified vehicle acceleration value based on said damped acceleration
information;
comparing said modified vehicle acceleration value to a predetermined threshold
value; and
actuating said vehicle safety device if said modified vehicle acceleration value
exceeds said predetermined threshold value.
17. The method of claim 16 wherein said modified acceleration value is a representative
measure of the progress of said event.
18. The method of claim 16, wherein said step of determining said modified vehicle acceleration
value includes the steps of:
determining a first measure evaluative of said damped acceleration information
in relation to time; and
determining a second measure correlated with the progress of said event,
wherein said estimated acceleration value is dertermined by multiplying said first
measure with said second measure.
19. The method of claim 18 wherein said step of determining said first measure includes
the step of determining a jerk value from the slope of said sampled acceleration information
in relation to time.
20. The method of claim 16 wherein said scale factor is a predetermined constant representative
of an acceleration which a passenger can be expected to withstand without requiring
actuation of said vehicle safety device.
21. The method of claim 16 wherein said scale factor is based on a function of time representative
of an acceleration which a passenger can be expected to withstand without requiring
actuation of said vehicle safety device.